Monday, March 25, 2019

Bato Dela Rosa: The Crypt Keeper

If you think Bato Dela Rosa deserves a seat in the Senate then good for you. Have a cookie. But if you think it's a wonderful and appropriate idea to hang Bato's campaign poster in a cemetery then there are not words low and dirty enough to describe you. 


Why would anybody think this is a good idea? What kind of person would look at this mausoleum and think, "That's the spot. That's where I will hang this Bato poster." Maybe they are being ironic seeing as many thousands died during op-tokhang while he was PNP Chief. Probably not. There are a lot of campaign posters hung up in this cemetery so maybe they thought this would be a nice prominent spot out front where everyone can see the poster.


On the back wall of this mausoleum is a picture of its inhabitant.  


He looks none too pleased to have Bato's poster blocking the view. His name is Ramon De La Cruz Labrador.  Born August 31, 1938 and died September 11, 2013. 85 years of life and now his grave has been desecrated by Senate hopeful Bato. Let's take a closer look at Bato's poster.


Wow. It seems the city has spoken. Bacolod City chooses you Bato-chu!

Saturday, March 23, 2019

Picture of the Week: Is This A Dead Body?

I take so many pictures that sometimes I do not know what to do with them all. Many of them form the substance of what is posted on this blog but many more are hidden away on my hard drive. I did post a series of pictures a few times called Scenes From Life In Filipinoville but I have not kept that up. 

Because I do want to share these pictures I am going to start another series called Picture of the Week. That does not mean the picture will have been taken that week but it will be a picture I want to highlight that week. So let's start it off with this picture I took on March 16th, 2019.


Is this guy dead?

Probably not. The story here is heading into town we passed a spot where an ambulance and a PNP patrol jeep were both parked with EMTs and PNP Officers attending to this man who was sitting up. It looked like one of the EMTs had a clipboard and the other was assessing his vitals. It was a very brief sight and the scene passed in a flash as we hurried into town.

On the way back the jeepney stopped near this man so a lady could alight and I hurriedly snapped this photo. What is going on? He's probably sleeping. Someone likely saw him asleep earlier, thought he was dead, and called the authorities to check on him. Seeing that the man was sound and healthy the EMTs and PNP Officers called to the scene left him where and as he was. That's my guess anyway. 

Friday, March 22, 2019

Retards in the Government 94

It's your weekly compendium of foolishness and corruption and murder in Philippine politics. 



The Sandiganbayan has convicted former Optical Media Board (OMB) chairman Ronny Ricketts of graft in connection with the release of confiscated pirated movie discs in 2010.
Well nine years ago this man was involved in movie piracy and now he has been convicted. Meanwhile vendors in illegal bootleg DVDs around the country continue to operate with impunity.


NARCOLIST!!!!
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1095838/duterte-exposes-46-narco-politicians
President Rodrigo Duterte announced on Thursday night in Davao City the names of 46 politicians on the government’s “narcolist,” or elected officials involved in the illegal drugs trade. 
The President stressed that several government agencies have vetted and validated the list, prompting him to “unmask these drug personalities.” 
Also on Thursday, the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG)  filed before the Office of the Ombudsman administrative cases against the 46 officials.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1095865/dilg-files-administrative-cases-vs-46-politicians-in-narcolist
According to the DILG, the 46 politicians would be facing administrative charges of grave misconduct, conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the service, conduct unbecoming of a public officer, and gross neglect of duty. 
The names of the politicians listed in the narcolist were revealed by the President on live broadcast via the government channel PTV-4 from Davao City on Thursday evening. 
According to the DILG, the list includes 35 mayors, seven vice mayors, a provincial board member, and three members of the House of Representatives.
Certainly we will see all these people arrested soon right? The reaction to this list has been varied from shouts of outrage and innocence to consternation on why they were included but perhaps the best reaction comes from Senator Grace Poe because it is so dumb.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1096168/poe-on-narcolist-duterte-probably-knows-what-hes-doing
Poe admitted that she had apprehensions at first on the government’s plan to release the names of personalities allegedly linked to illegal drugs ahead of the election in May. 
But in an interview on Friday, the senator said, “Ang Pangulo ay abogado, siguro alam niya ang ginagawa niya (The President is a lawyer. He probably knows what he is doing).” 
“Basta ang importante ay ito, magfile ng kaso at sagutin nila sa korte (The important thing is they file a case in court),” Poe said. “At least nalabas na yan, eh kung fake naman pala silang ano, edi mapatunayan sa korte ‘diba (It’s good that the list was released. If it’s fake, the courts will prove that, right)?” 
Aside from facing charges in court, the personalities included on the “narcolist” may also go directly to the people to belie the allegations hurled against them, according to Poe. 
“Kung malakas ang loob nila, magsalita sila sa taumbayan at sabihing hindi totoo yan dahil ito ang pruweba namin na hindi totoo yan,” the senator said. 
(If they are courageous enough, they will speak up and prove that the allegations were false by presenting proof.)
Even this bland personality reveals she does not know the first thing about law, namely the presumption of innocence. It is the government that has to present proof of guilt, not the other way around!

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1096175/second-narcolist-may-be-out-too-says-dilg

There are two lists? What?

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1095851/doj-chief-consumers-may-file-civil-cases-vs-manila-water
“If there is showing of fault or negligence on the part of Manila Water and if it is established that this crisis is caused not by natural causes of force majeure (unforeseeable circumstance), then affected consumers may file damage suits individually,” Guevarra said.
This kind of response, sue me or sue them, is typical in the Philippines but it does not solve anything. People need water now. A lawsuit will not bring the people water. Does this idiot think the people have the time, money, or wherewithal to file a lawsuit!!! It is absolutely ridiculous.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/03/15/duterte-to-resign-if-narco-syndicates-are-not-neutralized/
After identifying 46 politicians with suspected involvement in drugs, the President admitted that he would feel useless if the drug problem remained unresolved. 
“May mga ano kasi, may mga tao sa mundo na — hindi mo pwedeng lokohin.‘Yung ginagawa mo kaming kengkoy dito sa gobyerno, parang wala na kami [There are people in the world you cannot fool, like you’re making a fool of the government, like we’re nothing],” Duterte said during the national peace and order council meeting in Davao City Thursday. 
“If I cannot dispose of you, neutralize you, I will resign as President. Inutil ako [I’d be inutile],” he said.
President Rodrigo Duterte said Thursday he couldn’t care less if the priests critical of him and his government ended up getting killed. 
Duterte issued the remark just weeks after he called on the public to spare the religious leaders from harassment after Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle bared supposed death threats received by some priests and Caloocan Bishop Pablo Virgilio David, a critic of the drug war, from people claiming to be working for the Duterte family. 
“[T]hey tried to picture me na ‘pag namatay sila...I should be blamed because of my outburst. The hell. Wala akong pakialam kung mamatay kayo ngayon lahat. Maluwang pa ang ating cemetery,” the President said during the National Peace and Order Council meeting in Davao City. 
“Stop scaring people about your holiness. Do not scare me about you dying and getting me blamed.”
Why does he keep responding to the priests if he hates them so and doesn't care about their opinions or even if they get killed? Ignoring someone, silence, is powerful and says plainly, "You don't matter and are not worth responding to."

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1096511/andaya-to-senate-we-have-until-may-to-pass-2019-national-budget
“If the Senate is indeed serious in enacting a General Appropriations Act for 2019, we have until May this year to complete our task,” the Camarines Sur representative said in a statement. 
Both chambers will resume legislative session on May 20 until June 7. That is our last chance to pass the national budget,” he added.
Is this legislature really on holiday for the next two months? And they think they can overcome differences in the budget in just two weeks when they return?

https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/03/17/sk-councilor-2-others-nabbed-in-cavite-drug-sting/
A Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) councilor, or “kagawad”, and two of his cohorts were arrested by the police after they allegedly yielded sachets of dried marijuana leaves in a buy-bust operation in Rosario, Cavite Sunday. 
PO1 Ricardo Mendoza, case investigator, identified the suspects as Henry Oyao alias “JR,” 22, SK kagawad and resident of Brgy. Muzon 2, Rosario; Elmer Obiana alias Agler, 27; and a 16-year-old female student. 
Mendoza said the three suspects were all identified drug pushers and included in the barangay watch list.
A 16 year old drug pusher? Sure.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/03/17/palace-insists-ph-never-became-a-member-of-icc-says-tribunal-non-existent/
“The President’s staunchest critics and vocal detractors are at it again lambasting the supposed withdrawal of the Philippines from the Rome Statute and necessarily from the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC),” Panelo said. 
“The Philippines cannot leave that which has never joined in the first place. Our position on the matter remains clear, unequivocal and inflexible: The Philippines never became a State Party to the Rome Statute which created the ICC. As far as we are concerned, this tribunal is non-existent and its actions a futile exercise,” he added.
These are some of the dumbest words I have ever read in my life. It just defies all logic or sense or anything. The Philippines was a bonafide member of the ICC then Duterte withdrew because he did not want to be held accountable for his actions. That is a fact. Anything else is a lie.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/03/17/1902244/substantial-number-houses-families-affected-yolanda-remain-unfinished
A "substantial" number of houses for families affected by "Yolanda" remain unfinished more than five years after the typhoon ravaged the Visayas, Malacañang said Sunday.  
Citing a report of the National Housing Authority, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles said 56,140 of the 205,128 housing units in the "Yolanda" corridor are in Eastern Visayas.  
Of the 56,140 Eastern Visayas housing units, only barely more than half, or 29,531, are fully completed, with 18,183 units already occupied and 11,348 units ready for occupancy. 
What a shame. 5 years on and these housing units are still not built. When an earthquake and tsunami ravaged Japan in 2011 it was only a few months before everything was cleaned up and back to normalcy. 

http://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1064762
Agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) 10 (Northern Mindanao) and local policemen nabbed a former mayor of the town of Midsalip, Zamboanga del Sur, for possession of illegal drugs and firearms here Friday afternoon. 

Liwaya Angcap, former mayor of Midsalip town and her common-law partner, Leander Lumantas, were arrested after a search based on a warrant was conducted in their store and residence in Barangay Talairon, this city.  

Wilkins Villaneuva, PDEA-10 regional director, said Liwaya is the daughter of incumbent Mayor Leonida Angcap of Midsalip town, Zamboanga del Sur, who was among the officials on the narcolist released by President Rodrigo Duterte in Davao City on Thursday evening. 
This lady sounds like bad news. Why was she only arrested after the release of the narcolist?

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1096814/hugpong-member-also-on-dutertes-narcolist
Among those who expressed surprise to be included in the list was Mayor Leonida Angcap of Midsalip town in Zamboanga del Sur, a member of the HnP under Zamboanga del Sur 1st District Rep. Divina Grace Yu. 
But Mayor Duterte said in a statement on Saturday that she would not look at the President’s narcolist as basis for her endorsement of a candidate. 
She said she would never turn down politicians who would publicly request her to raise their hands, even if they were on the President’s list of narcopoliticians. 
The Davao mayor even said she chose not to get a copy of the list of narcopoliticians because she would rather leave it to the voters to decide on the qualifications they look for in a candidate.
Surprisingly Sara and her father do not seem to be on the same page when it comes to this issue.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2019/03/18/1902295/sandigan-suspends-roderick-paulate
The Sandiganbayan has issued a 90-day preventive suspension order against Quezon City Councilor Roderick Paulate in relation to a graft case he is facing over his alleged involvement in the hiring of ghost employees in 2010.
What is the point of a 90-day preventive suspension? The assumption here is that he is guilty so why not fully suspend him? Or better yet why not give him the presumption of innocence and wait until the case has played out and a verdict is handed down.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/03/18/brgy-chair-killed-in-leyte/
A village chair was killed, while his wife was wounded after being ambushed by still unidentified motorcycle-riding suspects in Alangalang town, Leyte province on Sunday (March 17). 
The victims were identified as Virgilio Vergara, 62, chairman of Barangay Buri and his wife, Corazon Vergara.
Another local politician shot dead by motorcycle gunmen.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1097456/palace-intl-organizations-unconsciously-conspiring-vs-duterte
“International organizations appear to have conspired against this President. They opt to believe what they’ve been receiving from this source the Philippines…false stories about the situation in this country,” Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo said in a Palace briefing. 
The Palace official added that “those who speak against the President” in relation to “human rights and drug-related killings” are all “citing the same figures” in condemning Duterte’s drug war, which according to government tally, has claimed the lives of more than 5,000 drug suspects since 2016. 
However, critics of the administration has been claiming that the real number may be in between 11,000 and 27,000, including vigilante-style killings that were not considered part of legitimate operations. 
Asked where these groups supposedly get their information, Panelo pointed to the “critics and detractors of the President.” 
“When these people issue statements, then the newspapers print it, that’s their basis. So unconsciously, they appear to be in conspiracy. Hindi lang siguro nila alam, parang ‘yun ang lumalabas. Pare-pareho sila ng sinasabi e,” he said.
News outlets and human rights organisations are unconsciously conspiring against Duterte by citing numbers the Duterte administration disputes. Why don't they file a libel suit against news organisations which cite these statistics? If these numbers are fake then what is the difference between them and Duterte pulling numbers about drug users out of the air which the PDEA and PNP say they have no idea where he got them from?

"Upon being re-arraigned, accused Valbuena, assisted by Atty. Baldovino Jr., manifested that he is waiving the reading of the informations, that he understands the nature of the charges against him as well as the consequences of the waiver, and that he is pleading guilty to the lesser offense," the decision read. 
The Sandiganbayan thus found Valbuena guilty beyond reasonable doubt and ordered him to pay a total fine of P10,000. 
Valbuena had been charged of falsification of public documents when he "willfully and unlawfully" failed to disclose the businesses of his wife, Aileen, in his SALN for July and April 2010.
“This developed in the wake of suspected election-related incidents in the last two elections, together with serious armed threats posed by the New People’s Army (NPA), Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF), Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG), rogue elements of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and/or Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and other analogous groups,” Comelec spokesman James Jimenez said in a statement. 
Jimenez said that areas under the Category Red Election Hotspot classification may warrant the motu proprio declaration of Comelec Control over these places. 
“The Comelec En Banc may also direct the augmentation of personnel of the Philippine National Police (PNP) and Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) as the need arises in the mentioned areas,” Jimenez added.
Send in the troops to secure the vote!

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1097860/ex-mayor-of-zamboanga-del-sur-town-ambushed-in-lanao-norte
The former mayor of Dumingag town in Zamboanga del Sur was ambushed along the national highway of Bacolod town in Lanao del Norte at 8:20  a.m. Wednesday (March 20). 
A sketchy report from the police here said Naciancino Pacalioga Jr., 57, former mayor of Dumingag, was on his way to Cagayan de Oro City when he made a short stop-over for personal necessity at Esperanza village when ambushed.
Another ex-mayor assassinated.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1097720/pdea-agents-seize-p1-b-worth-of-shabu-in-muntinlupa
Operatives of Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) seized 166.5 kilograms of crystal meth, or shabu, worth an estimated P1.13 billion in two operations in Muntinlupa on Tuesday. 
“Based on the packaging, these drugs came from the Golden Triangle of drug syndicates. This is the same packaging seized by other nations such as Thailand and Vietnam,” Aquino said in a press briefing. 
However, Aquino said they have yet to look into details of the suspects they had arrested and determine to which group they belong. 
“Nobody wants to talk dito sa grupo nito. Actually, I think they are from mainland China,” he said.
Even Senator Panfilo Lacson was baffled by the enormous presence of an estimated  P1-billion worth of shabu, which was later seized in Muntinlupa City on Tuesday. 
“How the hell did that volume pass through Customs and the police check points?” Lacson wrote on Twitter on Wednesday. 
“And the Chinese nationals? WTF!” said the senator, who once headed the Philippine National Police during the time of then President and now Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada.
It's real simple. Someone with a soft spot for China and her people wants these drugs to get into the country. That's really it. Will Duterte come out cursing and promising to kill these Chinese drug dealers for ruining the country? Don't count on it.


Two village watchmen in Quezon City were arrested Tuesday for allegedly demanding P30,000 for the release of a detainee at the barangay hall. 
According to authorities, a woman filed a complaint before the Batasan Police Station and alleged that personnel of Barangay Commonwealth were asking for money for the release of a relative arrested for illegal drugs. 
Police said they also rescued 38 people detained at the barangay hall. These were brought to the police station for questioning and might be released if investigators find no basis for their arrest, said Supt. Joel Villanueva, Batasan Police director. 
According to Villanueva, people arrested by village officers should immediately be turned over to the police. 
Villanueva noted that one of the detainees had been detained at the village facility for three weeks.
38 people being detained a the Barngay Hall, one for 3 weeks, all in the hopes that their families would pay the extortion fee.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1097842/china-to-donate-equipment-as-pcoo-aggressively-rehabs-govt-media
China is donating P15 million worth of equipment to the Presidential Communications  Operations Office (PCOO) as the administration “aggressively” rehabilitates government media, Communications Secretary Martin Andanar said. 
Andanar said Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Zhao Jianhua has “committed” to give the donation after PCOO submits a proposal. 
He said Zhao gave the commitment during their conversation at the State Banquet of Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammad in Malacañang on March 7. 
The equipment, he, would include laptops, desktops, microphones, audio consoles, among others, which would be used for the operations of the state-run Philippine Broadcasting Service (PBS) and Philippine News Agency (PNA). 
“The PCOO Organization is honored to be a constant recipient of donations and scholarships from the embassy of China since 2016,” Andanar said in a Viber message. 
“The act of goodwill is very timely because we are aggressively rehabilitating our government media agencies,” he added.
Translation: we are perfecting our propaganda techniques. How much spyware is embedded in all that equipment? 

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/03/20/19/dilg-files-complaints-vs-6-mayors-who-failed-to-organize-anti-drug-councils
Echiverri said the mayors are liable for misconduct and dereliction of their duties when they failed to form the councils in their towns to fight the proliferation of illegal drugs. 
“The failure of the respondent to create the local ADAC can be classified as a misconduct in office or a dereliction of duty which is among the grounds for discipline, suspension or removal from office of a local official,” Echiverri said in the complaints. 
The DILG said the mayors were reminded on several instances through memoranda to “activate, strengthen and ensure” the functions of anti-drugs councils. 
According to Echiverri, a total of 80 mayors will face complaints for not organizing the councils while 800 more will be held liable for “low functionality” of the councils they organized.
Do they have the funds to organise these councils? Are they even effective at ridding the cities of drugs?
http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2019/3/20/jinggoy-estrada-janet-napoles-pork-barrel-scam-trial.html
The anti-graft court has allowed former Senator Jinggoy Estrada and businesswoman Janet Lim Napoles to seek an outright dismissal of their plunder charges while trial is proceeding in connection with the pork barrel scam. 
In separate resolutions, the Sandiganbayan's Fifth Division on Wednesday granted Estrada and Napoles's motions for leave of court to file a demurrer to evidence. 
A demurrer to evidence is an option for the accused to seek dismissal of a case for lack of evidence halfway through the trial, based on evidence presented by the prosecution. 
"After a careful examination of the totality of the evidence presented by the prosecution, both testimonial and documentary, the court resolves to grant the present motion of the accused, to sufficiently provide him an opportunity to challenge the sufficiency of the prosecution's evidence establishing the material elements of the offense charged to support a judgment of guilt," the court said in the resolution on Estrada. 
Estrada and Napoles have said the prosecution failed to present sufficient evidence to arrive at a conviction. They have ten days to file their respective demurrers challenging the prosecution's evidence. 
"Thereafter, the incident shall be deemed submitted for resolution," the court said.
We are one step closer to seeing these people walk and no one being held accountable for the PDAF scam. Just one step.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1098257/big-shabu-haul-prompts-call-for-house-to-house-search
The representative of the congressional district where narcotics agents had seized P1.1 billion worth of “shabu” (crystal meth) proposed on Wednesday that house-to-house searches be conducted on rented properties in exclusive subdivisions to check whether these were being used by crime gangs, especially drug traffickers. 
Fenced-off exclusive residential areas provide a “secure” cover for criminals as entry is strictly regulated and neighbors rarely engage with one another, Muntinlupa Rep. Ruffy Biazon said. 
“I call on property owners and residents [of subdivisions] to cooperate and actively participate in weeding out those involved in the drug trade, which is a great scourge to society. At this time, each and every rented or vacant property should be checked and profiled to rule out its use by criminal elements,” Biazon said.
It sounds good and necessary sure but what it really is is a violation of one's privacy and the dismissal of the principle of the presumption of innocence. Have the PNP do there investigations and then get a warrant and make the bust. But if he really wants to go this route then Ruffy should be calling on the PNP to monitor all Chinese nationals as it was a group of Chinese who were busted with all that shabu. Of course no one will say that. Especially not DFA Sec. Locsin.

https://globalnation.inquirer.net/173743/locsin-to-china-well-look-out-for-your-people-in-ph
After meeting with State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Locsin said they agreed to set aside “differences we have yet to resolve” to pursue a “mutually beneficial relationship.” 
“Thus, you have our assurance that the Philippines will look out for your people in my country as I have seen China look out for our people in yours,” Locsin said in a joint press conference with Wang on Wednesday. 
“Without the new China, there will be no prospect whatsoever for the developing world to grow into emerging economies,” he said. 
“We would still be, as throughout the second half of the last century … at the mercy of Western markets, which on a whim, can turn us away, as they did throughout the post- and neocolonial period,” he added. 
Alluding to the United States, a longtime ally of the Philippines, Locsin said the Philippines and China were “never enemies,” and had “resist(ed) attempts by the Great Powers in the previous century to use our proximity against each other rather than for each other’s benefit.”
https://globalnation.inquirer.net/173736/locsin-praises-chinas-ruling-communist-party
Locsin said the Chinese Communist Party is supplying direction that “no other institution anywhere in the world could.” 
The secretary’s remarks reflected sentiment in the Cabinet of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who has frequently praised China and criticized his county’s long-standing alliance with the U.S. 
Speaking at the same occasion Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi ignored concerns over such disputes, calling China and the Philippines “friendly brothers” and “trusty friends.” 
“The cooperation between the two countries … brings more benefits to the people from two countries. It also contributes to the peace and stability of the region,” Wang said. 
The Philippines will be taking care of and looking out for all the illegal Chinese here?  All the Chinese drug dealers here? The Philippines and China will remain "trusty friends" and "friendly brothers" as long as the Philippines does not press its claims on the WPS. Praising a ruling party that literally slaughters its own people, a party that has been built on blood, is sickening. No Communist nation has ever been a good nation. Not one.How can Teddy lithely ignore the encroachment on Philippine territory and harassment of Filipino fisherman by the Chinese in the WPS. At least not everyone has forgotten.

https://globalnation.inquirer.net/173757/ex-philippine-officials-fishermen-file-crimes-against-humanity-case-vs-chinese-president-at-icc
In an unusual move, two former high-ranking Philippine government officials have filed a case against Chinese President Xi Jinping before the International Criminal Court, saying the “atrocious actions of Chinese officials in the South China Sea and within Philippine territory’’ constitute crimes against humanity that the ICC can prosecute. 
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario and former Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales filed the complaint, technically called a communication, on behalf of Filipinos and the hundreds of thousands of Filipino fishermen “persecuted and injured’’ by China’s aggressive island-building and occupation of islands in the West Philippine Sea. 
“In implementing China’s systematic plan to take over the South China Sea, President Xi Jinping and other Chinese officials have committed crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court which involve massive, near permanent and devastating environmental damage across nations,’’ the two former officials said in a communication filed with the ICC before the Philippines withdrew from the Rome statute on March 17.
Such a move maybe ultimately ineffective and cause a strain between China and the Philippines as well as embarrass Duterte but at least it shows that someone has not forgotten about the things China is doing in the WPS.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1098473/cop-arrested-in-las-pinas-for-illegal-drug-possession
In a press briefing at the Southern Police District headquarters in Taguig City, Deputy Director General Archie Gamboa, Philippine National Police (PNP) deputy chief for operations identified the suspects as PO2 Alejandro Hernandez and Rey Binggal Servitor. 
Hernandez, who was absent without official leave (AWOL) since 2012, was arrested by Las Piñas police officers manning the checkpoint in front of a restaurant along the Alabang-Zapote Road in Las Piñas City at about 4 a.m., Gamboa said.
AWOL for seven years and did no one in that time try to track him down?

Thursday, March 21, 2019

Political Garbage

In the Philippines politicians put their names on everything. Everything. What better place to put your name than on a garbage can?





Councillor Renecito Novero has set up these garbage cans with his name on them all over town. The thing is they are worthless as far as garbage cans go.  Sure you can put your trash in them but the receptacle is on the ground and has no lid which makes it a veritable buffet for any hungry dog who happen to come along.

What a waste of money to pretend you give two flips about the environment. They look like plant pots. Like a huge shrub should be growing out of them. I suppose they are better than nothing but here is what effective public waste cans look like:


No stray dogs will be getting into those bins.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Review: Fake Martin Guitar Strings

I have a Martin guitar and I prefer to use Martin strings. After stringing up my guitar with my last set I looked around town for another set of strings because it is always handy to have spares around just in case a string breaks. When I first saw these strings I hesitated because I knew they were fake. It was pretty obvious. The sales clerk told me they were Class A. Should have been Class F for Fake.


I bought them despite knowing their dubious authenticity because I figured they are better than nothing and I was curious as to how they would sound. Later I was able to buy a few sets of genuine Martin strings but when my strings finally broke I decided I would give these bad boys a shot.


The first thing you notice upon opening the package is that each string gets its own plastic bag. Genuine Martin strings come two in a paper sleeve.


Next you can see is that the ball end is very different.


The Martin strings have a bit of cloth tied at the end but the fakes do not. I'm not sure how much of a difference that makes to the sound.

Here is my guitar with the new strings on all ready to play.


The fake Martin strings sound really good. They are crisp and sharp and bright. The gauge is light which makes it easy to move my fingers up and down the fretboard. There are also no rust spots. The last few pairs of strings I used, which were genuine Martin stings, had rust spots on them. Maybe they were on the shelf for too long?  It has been about two months since I put the fake Martins on  my guitar and they still sound fresh.

I would buy these strings again if I were in a jam and needed some right away. It's too bad that whoever manufactures these strings is attempting to pass them off as Martin brand strings. Why not make their own brand name and build a solid reputation for their company? These strings are good quality and I don't see why the company that made them couldn't corner the domestic market and become known as the number one Pinoy manufacturer of acoustic guitar strings. But rather than do that they took the low route and stole someone else's name and logo and tried to pass their product off as Martin's.

Too bad.

Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Martial Law: ISIS Is Rising

As ISIS loses territory in the Middle East the Philippines is quickly becoming a new launching ground for the organisation. At least that is the thesis from a recent New York Times article. Let's take a look at some highlights.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/09/world/asia/isis-philippines-jolo.html
Across the islands of the southern Philippines, the black flag of the Islamic State is flying over what the group considers its East Asia province. 
Men in the jungle, two oceans away from the arid birthplace of the Islamic State, are taking the terrorist brand name into new battles. 
The Islamic State’s territory in Iraq and Syria, once the size of Britain, has shriveled after four years of American-backed bombing and ground combat by Kurdish and Shiite militia fighters. What is left is a tiny village in southeast Syria that could fall any day. 
But far from defeated, the movement has sprouted elsewhere. And here in the Mindanao island group of the southern Philippines, long a haven for insurgents because of dense wilderness and weak policing, the Islamic State has attracted a range of militant jihadists. 
“ISIS has a lot of power,” said Motondan Indama, a former child fighter on the island of Basilan and cousin of Furuji Indama, a militant leader who has pledged fealty to the group. “I don’t know why my cousin joined, but it’s happening all over.” 
“ISIS has money coming into the Philippines, and they are recruiting fighters,” said Rommel Banlaoi, chairman of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research. “ISIS is the most complicated, evolving problem for the Philippines today, and we should not pretend that it doesn’t exist because we don’t want it to exist.” 
American surveillance drones monitor the southern Philippine archipelago, where the nation’s Muslim minority is concentrated and local insurgencies have long battled the Christian-majority state. 
But even as the military offensive intensifies, the government avoids conceding that the Philippines is in the global slipstream of Islamist extremism. Top officials have played down incidents in which the Islamic State has sent foreign fighters and financing to the Philippines for deadly attacks. The violence, they often say, is squabbling between Muslim clans, or common banditry. 
Within a week of the Jolo cathedral bombing, the police declared the case solved, blaming a local militant group, Abu Sayyaf, with scant acknowledgment of how many of its insurgents have partnered with the Islamic State. 
Visiting the Jolo cathedral, Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Mr. Duterte and his entourage trampled over evidence, church officials said. Forensic investigators were kept from the crime scene for days. Dogs gnawed on body parts. 
“We are asking for an independent investigation because it was too quick, too soon to say it’s a closed case,” said Jefferson Nadua, a parish priest. “This is a serious matter that needs to be looked at more deeply because the threat is not just local. It’s maybe coming from outside, from ISIS.” 
In the 1990s, after Filipinos returned from the mujahedeen battlefields in Afghanistan and hard-line madrassas in Yemen and Saudi Arabia, local grievances fused with global calls for jihad. In a crescent-shaped swath of Southeast Asia, militants dreamed of a caliphate free of secular governance. 
Jemaah Islamiyah, the Qaeda offshoot that killed more than 200 people in a Bali nightclub in 2002, trained recruits in Philippine jungles. 
Later, as the Islamic State constructed its caliphate in the Middle East, it connected disparate militants in the Philippines under one ideological banner, said Sidney Jones, the director of the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict in Jakarta, Indonesia. 
“The government didn’t recognize its strength in attracting everyone from university-educated students to Abu Sayyaf kids in the jungle,” Ms. Jones said. “Whatever happens to the pro-ISIS coalition in Mindanao, it has left behind the idea of an Islamic state as a desirable alternative to corrupt democracy.” 
The idea that no overseas fighters have stolen onto Basilan was shattered last July when it was the site of the first suicide bombing in the Philippines. 
The Islamic State claimed that the attack, which killed 11 people, had been the work of a Moroccan recruit. The Philippine authorities initially denied the attack had been by a suicide bomber, much less a foreigner. Weeks later, they admitted it had been carried out by a German-Moroccan suicide bomber.
Just like the article about Marawi published by the Washington Post last month there is a lot of information here to unpack. The government apparently does not understand the gravity of what is written in this article and treats the presence and workings of ISIS as a mere possibility rather than as an objective fact.

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/687699/palace-gov-t-won-t-allow-phl-to-be-emerging-base-for-isis/story/
Malacañang on Tuesday assured the public that it will not allow the Philippines to become an emerging base for international terror group ISIS which is in danger of losing all the territory it once held in the Middle East.  
"We should undertake measures to prevent that from happening," presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo said at a news conference. 
"You will have to fight the ISIS. They would create hell for us. We are not here talking to destroy the future and our family," Duterte said.
It is too late for the government to say they will not allow the Philippines to become an emerging base for ISIS and that they should take measures to prevent that from happening when ISIS has been here since 2014 as I have previously written. Another thing the government, Duterte, is fond of saying is, "We are not Arabs." He says this to distinguish between the supposed brutality of ISIS tactics with the peaceful Malay ways of terrorism. He said it in 2016.
“You are not a warrior if you do that. We are not Arabs. That is not our culture. We are all Malay.”  
— Duterte in an August speech condemning how Philippine Islamic militants supposedly mutilated the bodies of slain soldiers. 
https://globalnation.inquirer.net/144023/144023?utm_expid=.XqNwTug2W6nwDVUSgFJXed.1
And he said it as recently as March 4th, 2019.
"Do not kill each other here. My god. We are not Arabs. We are Malays. It may be caused by religion but do not adhere to their insanity. They detonate bombs in malls," he added.
https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/03/04/1898714/duterte-says-abu-sayyaf-threat-driving-away-investments
The problem with Duterte's statements is that decades ago Filipino Muslims studied with and fought alongside the Arabs and they returned to the Philippines with that knowledge and those tactics. The founder of Abu Sayyf is Abdurajak Abubakar Janjalani.
A former teacher, he studied theology and Arabic in Libya, Syria and Saudi Arabia during the 1980s. 
When he returned to the Philippines in 1990 Janjalani was able to attract many Muslim youth to join his organization. Janjalani was also allegedly given $6 million by Osama Bin Ladento establish the organization as an offshoot of the Moro National Liberation Front(MNLF). Janjalani had allegedly met Bin Laden in Afghanistanin the late 1980s and allegedly fought alongside him against the Soviet Union during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdurajak_Abubakar_Janjalani
If the man studied theology in Saudi Arabia then he undoubtedly studied Wahhabism and brought that doctrine back to the Philippines. He was also not alone. According to the US military:
Abu Sayyaf was founded by Abdurajak Janjalani, an Islamic scholar and mujahedin in the Afghan-Soviet war, after he, like the contemporaries that formed his initial recruiting crop, returned from studies in Saudi Arabia and Libya determined to fulfill the Muslim ideal of an Islamic state.
In its inchoate stages and while under Janjalani's leadership, Abu Sayyaf was plugged into the international network of Islamic militants that received the support of Osama bin Laden. Abu Sayyaf-al Qaeda links are strong. Many of its fighters claim to have trained in Afghanistan, including as many as 20 who were in the graduating class of a Mazar-e Sharif camp in 2001; the titular group leader, Janjalani's brother, refined his terrorist skills in Libya.
https://web.archive.org/web/20030219091507/http://www.pacom.mil/piupdates/abusayyafhist.shtml
The idea of forming an independent Islamic state in Mindanao goes back further than the formation of Abu Sayyaf. Such was the goal of the MNLF from whom the MILF and Abu Sayyf both split when the MNLF settled for limited autonomy via the ARMM rather then full independence. But the reason for this compromise was because of the OIC (Organisation of Islamic Cooperation) which recognised the MNLF
as the sole and legitimate representative of the Bangsamoro people in Mindanao; and Misuari was officially granted by the OIC as observer status. This gave him special access to the organization.
Moreover, negotiations between the government and the MNLF were initiated. During the initial stage of negotiation, the MNLF firmly adhered to its original demand of complete independence. However, Misuari had to downgrade this to autonomy because OIC members seemed not to support any demand for complete independence. In 1974, the OIC made a historic resolution urging both parties to settle their problems within the premises of the national integrity of the Philippines. OIC Resolution No. 18 of the Political Committee at the fifth Islamic Conference of  Foreign Ministers, held at Kuala Lumpur on June 21-25, 1974, urged the Philippine Government to find a political and peaceful solution through negotiations with Muslim leaders, particularly with representatives of the MNLF in order to arrive at a just solution to the plight of the Muslims within the “framework of the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Philippines.” It further noticed that the Mindanao conflict is an internal problem of the Philippines. 
This particular resolution was very painful and tragic on the side of the MNLF. Misuari himself admitted that: 
The primary reason why we had to accept that resolution was because we were terrified at the prospect of being isolated from our brothers in the world. I told them (the OIC) that this is a very, very difficult choice you are giving us. It’s like putting a bar of hot iron down our throats but just the same, we had to accept it otherwise, the result would be bad – isolation – so we had to look for a solution within the parameters of an autonomous government.
https://www.academia.edu/4845226/THE_LIBERATION_MOVEMENTS_IN_MINDANAO_ROOT_CAUSES_AND_PROSPECTS_FOR_PEACE
Independence was also the reason the BIFF broke away from the MILF when they too settled for a limited autonomy. Such is the reason why the BARMM has been allotted much more sovereignty than the ARMM and why the members of the Bagsamoro Transition Authority balked at inhabitants of the region being referred to as citizens of the Republic of the Philippines. Independence was the goal from the beginning with the establishment of the MNLF which is itself a splinter group of the Muslim Independence Movement in who's Constitution the stated objective was as follows:
In its preamble, it clearly states that the Moro inhabitants of Mindanao, Sulu and Palawan “…make manifestation to the whole world its desire to secede from the Republic of the Philippines, in order to establish an Islamic State that shall embody their ideals and aspirations…”
https://www.academia.edu/4845226/THE_LIBERATION_MOVEMENTS_IN_MINDANAO_ROOT_CAUSES_AND_PROSPECTS_FOR_PEACE
An independent Islamic State in Mindanao has always been and still is the goal.

Back to the NYT article, what do we learn? That ISIS has a lot of power and is steadily recruiting people from all walks of life, that funding for ISIS is flowing into the country, that foreign fighters have been training here since at least 2002, that at the Jolo church blast site "Mr. Duterte and his entourage trampled over evidence" and declared the bombing solved linking to to Abu Sayyaf without any consideration of their links to ISIS, and that the government downplays the whole situation.

Basically the NYT is reporting the same story that has been reported here since the beginning of martial law in May 2017 and that is the Philippine government is woefully incompetent in it's war against terrorism and dire consequences, in this case the rise of ISIS, are the direct result.

This week the titular head of ISIS Philippines was thought to have been killed during a battle with the AFP.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1096506/military-still-verifying-possible-death-of-terror-leader-abu-dar
Top military officials are still validating whether one of the four suspected terrorists killed in a clash Thursday with government troops in Tubaran town in Lanao del Sur was Abu Dar, believed to be the successor of Isnilon Hapilon, reported emir of the Islamic State in Southeast Asia. 
“Yung tama niya is sa mukha eh. Medyo deformed yung mukha niya ngayon kaya medyo there was doubt na si (He was hit in the face, so his face was deformed, so, there are doubts that it is) Abu Dar but there were signs,” Brawner said. 
The military is now submitting DNA samples to the Scene of the Crime Operatives (SOCO) to validate the identity of the body. Brawner said it would take at least a month for them to ger the result.
Where did the military get the DNA from to definitively compare with this corpse? Did they swab his mouth at one time in the past? The Americans will be assisting in the identification of the body. If it turns out to be Abu Dar then someone will take his place just as he took the place of Isnilon Hapilon. ISIS is not going anywhere at the moment. Aside from Abu Sayyaf the BIFF is also aligned with ISIS.

http://archive.is/TdSj1

Security forces continue with their hunt for members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters in the restive Muslim province of Maguindanao where clashes had reportedly killed over 2 dozen militants, including a Singaporean terrorist. 
More troops were sent to different towns in an effort to destroy BIFF groups scattered in the province. The 6th Infantry Division said the campaign, which began March 11, was aimed containing the terror threats posed by the BIFF, whose leaders led by Abu Turaife, have pledged allegiance to ISIS.
It said as many as 20 militants under Turaife were slain in the assaults in Shariff Saydona town, and among those killed was Muhammad Ali Bin Abd Al Rahman or Muawiya, a notorious jihadist belonging to the Indonesian Jemaah Islamiya and had been a bomb trainer for the Abu Sayyaf group.
One of these militants turned out to be an Arab who allegedly trained local militants in bomb making and belonged to Jemaah Islamiya. That Jemaah Islamiya has operatives in the Philippines should be alarming to officials but not surprising. This Indonesian terror group has been engaging in terrorist activities in the Philippines since their formation in 1993. They also have links to the MILF.
Further, JI has close links to the Philippine rebel group MILF (Moro Islamic Liberation Front). The militant wing is promoting Islamist laws and prepares for battle through training and weapon acquisition. 
The MILF has denied these links but why would they affirm them? When dealing with Muslims one must always remember the principle of Taqiya which is lying. 
According to sharia, in certain situations, deception – also known as 'taqiyya', based on Quranic terminology, – is not only permitted but sometimes obligatory. 
According to the authoritative Arabic text, Al-Taqiyya Fi Al-Islam: "Taqiyya [deception] is of fundamental importance in Islam. Practically every Islamic sect agrees to it and practices it. We can go so far as to say that the practice of taqiyya is mainstream in Islam, and that those few sects not practicing it diverge from the mainstream...Taqiyya is very prevalent in Islamic politics, especially in the modern era."
This week MILF Vice Chairman Ghazali Jaafar died from kidney failure. He was the architect of the peace agreement between the MILF and the GPH. He led the Bangsamoro Transition Committee  which drafted the BBL. Without him there certainly would not be a BARMM. He was a man heavily involved in politics. What did he have to say about the peace process?
Jaafar said it was important that government and the MILF are on the same page on the definition of peace “kasi the way we look at it, ang definition ng gobyerno sa peace is the absence of fighting. That is not the peace that we want. There can be no peace if the Bangsamoro agenda is not addressed to the satisfaction of the greater majority of the Bangsamoro people. This can be addressed if ma-realize yung demand ng Bangsamoro people na meron silang gobyerno and government they will run for everybody, Muslims and non-Muslims alike and a democratic government and still under the Republic of the Philippines.”
https://www.mindanews.com/peace-process/2019/03/milfs-ghazali-jaafar-passes-away-his-last-public-appeal-to-fellow-leaders-be-the-unifying-forces-for-our-people/
Peace is the absence of fighting according to the government but that is not the kind of peace the MILF wants. The peace the MILF wants is addressing the Bangsamoro agenda to the satisfaction of the Bangsamoro people which is a thinly veiled way of saying "independence."  Read what else he has had to say over the years.
MILF leaders said they plan to press Manila for self-governance and recognition of their "ancestral domain" to end their insurgency.  
MILF deputy chief Ghazali Jaafar, speaking at his heavily fortified home in Mindanao, said Manila should acknowledge that the Bangsamoro, or Muslim people, historically ruled the south of this mostly Roman Catholic country.  
"Mindanao was ruled by our ancestors and should be recognized as such and returned to us," Jaafar told Agence France Presse in an interview as he sat under the insurgents’ flag and closely guarded by two guerrillas wielding M-16 assault rifles.  
"We want self-governance, a system by which we Muslims can solve the problems of our own people. And not just an agreement favoring a few Muslims leaders," he said.  
This will all depend on President Arroyo, the rebel leader said but added the MILF leadership "is willing to sign an agreement if there is a favorable solution to the problem of the Bangsamoro who remain colonized."  
"We are not negotiating for surrender," Jaafar said. "But we have been fighting for three decades and it is time we find a solution."  
However, joining the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) is "unacceptable," he said, because it has been a failure and does not reflect "the will of the Bangsamoro."  
"The so-called ARMM is not a real autonomy. It did not have power and answers still to the Manila government. It also did not contribute to the improvement in the lives of Muslims," Jaafar said.  
"Look around you, we are still a poor people." 
Does Jaafar want "a democratic government still under the Republic of the Philippines" or does he want the whole of Mindanao to be returned to the Bangsamoro people? Does he want sovereignty or limited autonomy? At the moment the BARMM will continue to answer to Manila just as the ARMM did so why would the MILF agree to that if their real and stated goal is independence? The answer can be found in the Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. 2, page 539.

The duty of the djihad exists as long as the universal domination of Islam has not been attained. "Until the day of the resurrection", and "until the end of the world" say the maxims. Peace with non-Muslim nations is, therefore, a provisional state of affairs only; the chance of circumstances alone can justify it temporarily. Furthermore there can be no question of genuine peace treaties with these nations; only truces, whose duration ought not, in principle, to exceed ten years, are authorized. But even such truces are precarious, inasmuch as they can, before they expire, be repudiated unilaterally should it appear more profitable for Islam to resume the conflict. It is, however, recognized that such repu- diation should be brought to the notice of the infidel party, and that he should be afforded sufficient opportunity to be able to disseminate the news of it throughout the whole of his territory
How long will it be before the leaders of the BARMM throw off all pretensions to accepting limited autonomy and push for full independence via secession in order to fulfil their dream of an Islamic State based on ancestral domain claims over the whole of Mindanao? It should be noted that the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain signed between the MILF and the government back in 2008 was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme court. This memorandum would have set up an entity known as the Bangsamoro Juridical Entity. Here is what the Supreme Court had to say:
It is not merely an expanded version of the ARMM, the status of its relationship with the national government being fundamentally different from that of the ARMM. Indeed, BJE is a state in all but name as it meets the criteria of a state laid down in the Montevideo Convention, namely, a permanent population, a defined territory, a government, and a capacity to enter into relations with other states.

Even assuming arguendo that the MOA-AD would not necessarily sever any portion of Philippine territory, the spirit animating it which has betrayed itself by its use of the concept of association runs counter to the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Republic.
"No province, city, or municipality, not even the ARMM, is recognized under our laws as having an associative relationship with the national government. Indeed, the concept implies powers that go beyond anything ever granted by the Constitution to any local or regional government. It also implies the recognition of the associated entity as a state. The Constitution, however, does not contemplate any state in this jurisdiction other than the Philippine State, much less does it provide for a transitory status that aims to prepare any part of Philippine territory for independence."
http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/jurisprudence/2008/october2008/183591.htm
How is the BARMM any different from the BJE? The spirit animating its founders, the MILF, is that it is to be an independent nation based on claims of ancestral domain. Groups have raised issues about the constitutionality of the BARMM but the Supreme Court has yet to have any hearings which means it's full-speed ahead in the establishment of this region with no regard as to its constitutionality. If there were to be a hearing now after the plebiscite has already ratified the BOL and the law were to be found illegal and void there would be outrage across the region and the anger would lead to bloodshed.

Whatever the fate of the region it is Ghazali Jaafar who can be thanked. It is no surprise many people are mourning his death.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1095229/senators-mourn-passing-of-milf-vice-chairman-ghazali-jaafar
“His sincerity, wisdom and experience are attributes needed to drive his and our dreams of a successful Mindanao… We all have to work as one now and continue what he has started,” Gordon said. 
“We are a poorer nation for his passing, having lost not only an astute intellect but also a committed heart,” Zubiri said in a separate statement. 
“But though his passing leaves an aching hollow, we will always remember him, as his life’s work has interminably changed the course of Mindanao’s history, and the nation at large,” he added. 
“He lived knowing that peace is not only an outcome but also a process that needed the participation of as many stakeholders as possible, including not only of the warriors on both sides or the Bangsamoro people but also of regular folk and indigenous and settler communities,” Pangilinan said in a statement. 
“May his death inspire enhanced peace efforts in the island of Mindanao that would mean better lives for all, especially Filipino children,” he added. 
Senator Grace Poe called Jaafar a “warrior for Muslim rights and warrior for peace.” 
“Amid the grueling challenges, he held on to hope and saw through the establishment of the Bangsamoro region for the Moro people’s self-rule,” Poe said in a statement. 
“The people who are left behind will make sure all your initiatives for a peaceful society will not come to an end,” she added. 
Senator Sonny Angara called Jaafar “a voice of reason and a voice for peace” and he will “surely be missed.”
One can only wonder if these Senators have any idea of the intentions of Jaafar and the MILF and what they consider peace to be. To quote Jaafar again:
Jaafar said it was important that government and the MILF are on the same page on the definition of peace “kasi the way we look at it, ang definition ng gobyerno sa peace is the absence of fighting. That is not the peace that we want. There can be no peace if the Bangsamoro agenda is not addressed to the satisfaction of the greater majority of the Bangsamoro people. This can be addressed if ma-realize yung demand ng Bangsamoro people na meron silang gobyerno and government they will run for everybody, Muslims and non-Muslims alike and a democratic government and still under the Republic of the Philippines.”
For Jaafar and the MILF peace does not mean the cessation of hostilities. Peace means independence.  Why do none of these Senators know that?